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A Few Words About Investigations in Europe 175
outline of the information expected can speed the work enormously.
You can make the process more transparent and comfortable for the
overseas investigator and your client if you all understand what is
required to get started and what to expect.
• Be prepared to tell the investigator precisely where the work is
located. The more precise, the better.
• Provide the name of the entity in which you are interested if at all
possible.
• Be prepared for the investigation to take longer than it would in
the United States.
• Expect that there will be some documents that will not be acces-
sible.
• Understand that for a number of reasons, the cost will be higher.
Chapter 14
PROFESSIONAL PRIVATE INVESTIGATORS
IN THE CIVIL JUSTICE SYSTEM
WARREN J. SONNE
M
ost if not all civil justice systems around the world provide a
forum for settling claims, or disputes among people, and enforc-
ing the government’s laws. These systems vary greatly from place to
place and can change rapidly over time. King Solomon used the threat
of a sword to settle the opposing claims of two would-be mothers;
today issues of embryonic cell research and human cloning are part of
the modern legal lexicon.
As civil laws have evolved, so have the professions that provide ser-
vices to assist with the prosecution or defense of the parties involved.
Judges and advocates are better educated in the laws; doctors (of both
medicine and philosophy), and engineers are called upon to provide
advice to their clients, and/or expert testimony based on their years of


formal education and experience. New professions, such as computer
or cellular forensics, are created as new technologies appear.
Professionalism in the investigative field has kept pace, providing
great opportunities for private investigators to work with preeminent
clients. It is no surprise that there is no single universal standard or
license for private investigators, just as there is no universal license for
doctors or lawyers. Through perseverance, however, and aided more
recently by the development of the Internet, private investigators have
been able to expand their knowledge base; communicate ideas; and
improve the local, national, and international professional associa-
176
Professional Private Investigators in the Civil Justice System 177
tions, transcending borders and time zones.
We are indeed a profession, because of the following:
• We have a universal philosophy to honestly seek the truth for our
clients.
• We have developed bodies of knowledge that we archive for the
use of others.
• We continually publish literature of research, and peer review.
• Our leaders around the world represent us to governments, cli -
ents, and the press.
• Our associations have codes, guidelines, oaths, mission, and eth -
ics statements.
• We advocate for licensing, certification, specific initial qualifica-
tions, as well as requirements for ongoing education.
• We have formal dispute resolution, complaint, and disciplinary
procedures.
• We offer thorough and often highly specialized investigative ser-
vices.
• We investigate for our livelihoods.

There is a “natural selection” process at work within the civil justice
field. Both plaintiffs and defendants seek out the best-qualified attor-
neys to support their cause. These same clients or their advocates will
seek out the best-qualified persons or companies to assist them. If a
pri vate investigator is required for either litigation or other issues,
clients will look for the most-qualified professional they can find.
Nothing builds a long-term relationship like success does. The strong
will survive.
Exactly what are professional private investigators within the civil
justice system? Let me start with what we are not:
• We are not lawyers, yet we need to know the legal limits of our
actions and stay within them. We need to understand the issues
and the theories of law that are involved.
• We are not engineers, yet we need to have an understanding of
how things work or were designed to work. We need to know the
products in question and how they are used. We need to have a
good eye for detail.
178 Basic Private Investigation
• We are not paramedics, but we need to have an understanding of
what they do at accident or injury scenes.
• We are not automotive mechanics or plumbers, yet we need to
have a concept of normal operations, maintenance, and repairs.
• We are not janitors, yet we need to know how and when things
get cleaned or maintained.
• We are not firemen, yet we need to know their basic procedures
at the scene, as well as their record-keeping procedures.
• We are not handymen or carpenters, yet we need to know how
they fix a loose handrail or a step or the proper use of a nail gun.
• We are not the police, yet we need to be especially aware of their
actions at accident or injury scenes and their follow-up investiga-

tive procedures.
• We are not doctors, auto body mechanics, tow truck drivers, pro -
perty managers, truckers, or so many of the other professions that
we are called upon to investigate or interview during the course
of a civil matter.
What we are:
• We are the front line eyes and ears for our clients.
• We are the gatherers of facts; obtainer of records; locator of vehicles
and other equipment, or parts thereof; interviewer of witnesses;
pro fessional photographer; safe guarder of evidence; liaison with
law enforcement; expeditor, report writer and many others things.
• We are the seekers of the truth, the true reporters of certain life
events.
“As gatherers of facts it is our responsibility to obtain the most info-
mation possible. The term knowledge is power has real-world mean-
ing to our clients. If we are able to provide them with specific facts, or
witnesses that are not known to the opposition, it allows our client to
better formulate their plan. On the other hand, should the opposition
obtain information or witnesses that we are unaware of; it places our
client at a distinct disadvantage. You will not keep clients if you con-
tinually leave them under-informed.”
1
1. Warren J. Sonne, Investigating automotive product liability claims, PI Magazine, 70, Nov/Dec
2003.
Professional Private Investigators in the Civil Justice System 179
CIVIL INVESTIGATION
There are three basic differences between criminal and civil mat-
ters: (1) in criminal matters, the plaintiff or accuser is the “People of
the State” or “of the United States,” whereas in civil matters the ac -
cuser is overwhelmingly a private individual or business entity who

be lieves that he or she or it has been wronged, (2) the punishment at
stake in criminal cases is incarceration and occasionally a fine or resti-
tution, whereas the punishment in civil matters is usually monetary,
and (3) the evidence requirements (burden of proof) are much greater
in criminal cases than in civil ones. In the United States, the burden of
proof in criminal trials is always on the prosecution, who must prove
the case beyond a reasonable doubt, yet in civil cases this burden always
begins with the accuser but may under certain circumstances shift to
the defendant and both must only prove the case by a preponderance of
the evidence, meaning just a little more than their adversary. In some
civil cases, the level of proof may require the slightly higher level of
clear and convincing evidence that is still well below the criminal
requirement. Each state in the United States addresses this burden of
proof in its own way. Other nations have developed their own distinct
burdens of proof.
Other differences between U.S. criminal and civil matters have to
do with the protections that are afforded to the participants under the
law. As long as the government or its agents are not prosecuting, civil
cases are not filled with issues such as the U.S. Supreme Court’s 1966
Miranda decision (“The person in custody must, prior to interrogation,
be clearly informed that he or she has the right to remain silent, and
that anything the person says will be used against that person in court;
the person must be clearly informed that he or she has the right to con-
sult with an attorney and to have that attorney present during ques-
tioning, and that, if he or she is indigent, an attorney will be provided
at no cost to represent her or him”
2
), or the rules of evidence defined
in the Supreme Court’s Mapp v. Ohio decisions, which decided that evi-
dence in state court criminal cases that was “obtained in violation of

the Fourth Amendment, which protects against unreasonable searches
and seizures, may not be used in criminal prosecutions in state courts,
2. Miranda v. Arizona 384 U.S. 436 (1966)
180 Basic Private Investigation
as well as federal courts.”
3
This reference to unreasonable searches and
seizures only applies to government agents and not to nongovern-
mental plaintiffs and defendants in civil matters. Nor are there any
other constitutional protections under the Fourth (unreasonable search
and seizure), Fifth (self-incrimination and speedy trial), and Sixth
(right to counsel) Amendments. There is also no double jeopardy issue
between the criminal and the civil laws, as demonstrated by the civil
prosecution of O.J. Simpson after his acquittal on criminal murder
charges.
These differences in the U.S. criminal and civil systems of the law
have a significant impact on the manner in which private investigators
conduct their business. This chapter is not being written as a legal
primer, nor should it be interpreted as legal advice, rather it offers a
general overview of the issues that professional private investigators
deal with on a daily basis. Investigators are strongly urged to seek the
advice of their own attorneys, and/or their attorney clients, and to
familiarize themselves with the appropriate laws for their geographic
area of investigation, both in the United States and, as applicable,
internationally.
For the purposes of this chapter, civil investigations will be consid-
ered to be U.S. cases that begin as not criminal, even though they may
evolve to reach the criminal threshold. Other countries may have sim-
ilar or very different concepts. Furthermore, the investigative tech-
niques will be discussed without bias as to plaintiff or defendant cli -

ents. The role of the investigator as the seeker of facts applies to all
cases, regardless of the nature of the client.
Civil law is an overly broad term because it includes many special-
ized and diverse areas, such as:
• international law
• constitutional and administrative law
• contract law
• tort law
• property law
• equity and trusts
• labor law
3. Mapp v. Ohio, 367 U.S. 643 (1961)
Professional Private Investigators in the Civil Justice System 181
• human and civil rights
• immigration law
• social security law
• family law
• commercial law
• admiralty law
• intellectual property
• banking law
• tax law
• antitrust law
• environmental law and other subspecialties.
At some point in time, a private investigator may become involved
with cases that touch upon these areas of the civil law, and in fact there
are some investigators who specialize in many of these categories. Yet,
of all these areas, professional private investigators are more likely to
be involved in the area that deals with negligence: tort law.
TORTS

Torts are civil wrongs recognized by law as grounds for a lawsuit.
These wrongs result in an injury or harm constituting the basis for a
claim by the injured party. . . .
While some torts are also crimes punishable with imprisonment, the
primary aim of tort law is to provide relief for the damages incurred
and deter others from committing the same harms. . . . Among the
types of damages the injured party may recover are: loss of earnings
capacity, pain and suffering, and reasonable medical expenses. They
include both present and future expected losses. . . . Torts fall into three
general categories: intentional torts (e.g., intentionally hitting a per-
son); negligent torts (causing an accident by failing to obey traffic
rules); and strict liability torts (e.g., liability for making and selling
defective products). Intentional torts are those wrongs which the defen-
dant knew or should have known would occur through their actions or
inactions. Negligent torts occur when the defendant’s actions were
unreasonably unsafe. Strict liability wrongs do not depend on the
degree of carefulness by the defendant, but are established when a par-
ticular action causes damage. (Personal knowledge of author)
182 Basic Private Investigation
THE SEARCH FOR NEGLIGENCE
Torts are likely the basis for the majority of investigative man-hours
expended in civil cases. A party who believes that he or she was
harmed by another party’s negligence can institute a lawsuit for the
pur pose of collecting damages and, in some cases, to prevent the de -
fendant from committing the same type of harm to others. Many times
the defendant may also face the risk of additional monetary punish-
ment in the form of punitive damages. Punitive damages (punishment)
can be awarded in most states when the jury finds that the defendant
knowingly or maliciously harmed the plaintiff(s). In cases such as this
both the plaintiff and the defendant may retain the services of private

investigators. Automobile accidents, trip and falls, dog bites, and prod-
uct liability cases are examples of torts.
The goal of the plaintiff in tort cases is to prove the negligence of the
defendant. Often plaintiffs will share in the negligence if they have
done something themselves to cause the injury or failed to do some-
thing that could have prevented or lessened it. Defendants will seek to
prove that they did nothing wrong or that the plaintiffs were responsi-
ble, or at least partially responsible, for their own damage or injury.
This theory of law is known as contributory negligence, and in sever-
al states it can prevent a plaintiff from winning any award in a case in
which he or she was found to be even the slightest bit negligent.
The degree to which negligence must be proved varies from state to
state, and in most jurisdictions any damages that are awarded to the
plaintiff may be reduced by the percentage of negligence for which the
plaintiff was found to be responsible. For example, if the jury or judge
found that the plaintiff’s injuries were worth $100,000 but also believes
that the plaintiff was 25 percent at fault in the accident, the amount
that the plaintiff would be awarded is $75,000. This is known as com-
parative negligence.
Plaintiffs will try to prove that the other party was responsible, or at
least more responsible than the plaintiff is. In most personal injury cases
the plaintiff will need to show that the defendant was either the direct
cause or, through some negligence, caused the plaintiff to be injured.
Often, private investigators will be leading these searches for negligence.
In certain instances, such as product liability cases, the manufactur-
er or seller may be liable based solely on the faultiness of the product,
Professional Private Investigators in the Civil Justice System 183
whether the defect occurred during the design, construction, or pack-
aging of the product or if there was a failure to warn the user about
some hazard involved with the product’s use. Some notable examples

of this theory of law are the Ford Explorer Firestone tires, fifteen-inch
ATX, ATX II, and Wilderness AT tires, which suffered from a high-
tread separation rate; asbestos or lead paint litigations; or the current
(2009–2010) Toyota sudden acceleration cases, which should begin
making their way through the courts shortly.
When selling their products, the manufacturer and their entire
downstream chain of vendors or resellers may be held responsible for
injuries caused by the use of that product. Each state has its own rules
regarding the statute of limitations for bringing such law suits, and/or
may have enacted a statute of repose. A statute of repose is a statute
barr ing a suit a fixed number of years after the defendant had acted
(usually by designing or manufacturing an item), even if the injury suf-
fered by the plaintiff occurred after the period had lapsed.
Warnings and instructions on the proper use of a product, such as
using a gas-operated generator only in a well-ventilated area, or wear-
ing seat belts to protect you from injury during vehicle accidents, are
now required by law in the United States. In such cases, there is no
need for the plaintiff to prove negligence, only that the product was
defective or that there were no adequate warnings. Again, the laws
governing product liability are determined by each state or country
and are not universal.
If the injured party may have been using the product in an inap-
propriate or reckless way that was not imagined by or designed for by
the manufacturer, however, the private investigator’s hunt for contrib-
utory and/or comparative negligence may be back on. Examples of
possible inappropriate or reckless use would be the use of a flashlight
to hammer a nail, causing an injury from a broken lens or casing;
using the family car to knock down the barn; or using a propane torch
to dry your hair. Again, each state treats these issues differently, so pri-
vate investigators need to know what they should be looking for.

In most cases involving strict liability, meaning that the manufactur-
er is liable if the product is defective even if the manufacturer was not
negligent in making that product defective, there may only be a limited
need for private investigators. These cases generally involve plaintiff’s
experts reviewing the defendant’s records that were ob tained through
184 Basic Private Investigation
the discovery process or that may have been obtained from other attor-
neys who were successful in bringing similar product cases against the
same manufacturer for the same defect. Investigative requirements may
only be limited to verification that the injury was caused by the product
or confirmation that the plaintiff is who he or she claims to be or that
he or she was exposed to the specific product as claimed.
In other cases, such as asbestos, tobacco, and lead paint litigation,
the investigations may span back over decades to determine if the
plain tiff actually worked with, or was exposed to, products that con-
tained these substances. Asbestos litigation was originally brought
against the manufacturers of insulation and flooring materials but has
expanded to include the automotive and other industries that used
asbestos in frictionable products such as brake pads and clutches.
These types of litigations have also expanded to include those who
may have been exposed by secondhand means, such as children sit-
ting on their parents’ laps when they returned home from work from
an asbestos contaminated site or people inhaling smoke from someone
else’s cigarette.
Another theory of negligence that still exists in some states is
assumption of risk where potential plaintiffs sometimes take the risk of
injury onto themselves and absolve potential defendants from any lia-
bility. Formerly, this was an affirmative defense available to defen-
dants but has since been subsumed by contributory and comparative
negligence in most jurisdictions.

Prior to the current workers’ compensation laws, the assumption of
risk was a common defense used by employers. Now that workers’
compensation laws prevent employees from directly suing their em-
ployer for negligence, this defense has been all but abandoned.
Many states still follow a related theory of law called the “Fireman’s
Rule,” however. As with the assumption of risk, these laws limit the
ability of public employees who are routinely involved in emergen-
cies, such as police and firefighters, to sue for damages based on
injuries that they may sustain during the normal scope of their em -
ployment. The laws vary greatly, with some states allowing lawsuits
based on negligence of the property owner or their contractors, prod-
uct liability, dram shop laws, and so on.
The investigator of tort claims must be aware of the legal require-
ments of negligence as it relates to their client’s case within the juris-
Professional Private Investigators in the Civil Justice System 185
diction. As a professional private investigator you will find your clients
may consist of both plaintiffs and defendants. Although there are in -
vestigators who may limit their practice to one side or the other, most
will accept cases from both sides of the aisle. As your investigation
continues, you must always look for issues relating to negligence.
THE TEAM CONCEPT
As a professional private investigator you are a part of a larger team.
Many law firms (both plaintiff and defense) will maintain full-time in-
house investigators, some of whom may also function in a paralegal ca -
pacity. These investigators will usually get to follow a case from intake
to disposition, including assisting the attorneys in the courtroom. Most
private investigators will not have this degree of total immersion in the
case, yet it is extremely important to become as familiar as possible
with every aspect of every matter on which you are engaged.
If you are not an in-house investigator, do not be offended if you are

excluded from certain knowledge or certain client meetings. Some
attorneys and their clients, especially in product liability defense cases,
feel that an independent investigator is not bound by the attorney—
client privilege, and they may feel at risk in sharing all of their secrets
with you for fear that this knowledge may be used against them in
future cases. Although these meetings may be covered under the attor-
ney-client privilege, which protects private communications between
them, there still may be resistance to allowing an investigator to take
part, even if the investigator has signed a confidentiality agreement.
Regardless of whether or not you are admitted to the inner sanctum,
you should check your ego at the client’s door. Your experience, knowl-
edge, and suggestions should always be available for the client to con-
sider, but much like a sports team, there can be only one manager.
Investigators must take care not to deviate from the overall inves-
tigative plan without first discussing it with the client. Being a team
player is all about communicating. There may be issues that you are
unaware of, such as reasons not to interview a particular person, for
example, for fear of alerting the opposition or worse, damaging your
client’s case. If your client has instructed you not to take recorded or
signed statements at this stage, do not take it upon yourself to do so
186 Basic Private Investigation
without discussing it first. There may be good reasons, that you are not
aware of, for not memorializing statements at this point. Your obliga-
tion is to service your client’s needs and to keep them well-informed
as you move forward. Communications should be a two-way street,
and in a perfect world you would be made aware of changing issues
that could affect your investigation. Regardless, you should ask the
client for updates from time to time as well, so that you can keep up
to speed with the status of the case. The investigative plan is not writ-
ten in stone; rather it will evolve as the case continues. The plan

should evolve as the result of a team effort, however.
PREASSIGNMENT PREPARATION
The initial involvement in a tort investigation will vary depending
on the terms of your employment, or your relationship with your
client. If you are an in-house investigator for a plaintiff’s law firm you
may actually become involved before the attorney does. Perhaps you
work for a large investigative agency that has a nationwide contract
with a manufacturer, or maybe you monitor media reports for any
mention of your client or their products, or you may be a sole practi-
tioner who has been retained for the first time by a lawyer or insur-
ance company client. Whatever the retention scenario is, if possible,
you should try to learn as much as you can about the matter at hand
prior to your initial meeting with the client.
It is rare in tort cases for an investigator to be retained directly by a
member of the general public. In fact, if you are approached by an
individual to investigate a negligence case directly for them, it may be
advisable to recommend that they also retain the services of an attor-
ney. If you report directly to that lawyer, the results of your investiga-
tion may then be covered by the attorney-client privilege as attorney
work product. You will also be removing yourself from those clients’
questions regarding whether or not you have actually discovered neg-
ligence and what it means. Those types of opinions and advice should
be answered by an attorney, rather than an investigator.
Because you will more than likely be retained by an attorney, insur-
ance company, or perhaps even directly by a manufacturer or other
business client, the following pages are written from that point of view.
Professional Private Investigators in the Civil Justice System 187
Good recordkeeping begins with your first involvement with the
case. The method by which you maintain case files will determine how
you record, safeguard, and document your information and evidence.

You may be using a case management software package, Redweld’s or
other file folders with an index sheet, notebooks, index cards, and so
on. Whichever method you use, be sure to document your initial
retention in every case, whether it came by phone, letter, or e-mail or
in person. A best practice is to obtain a written retention letter.
Come to the initial meeting knowing as much about the incident as
possible. If there were media reports, obtain copies for discussion with
the client. If you are able to obtain copies of police or other official
reports prior to the first meeting, bring them with you as well. If the
client has sent you a synopsis or copies of records, you should attempt
to find or verify as much information about the case before your first
meeting with the client. Client relations are an ongoing process that
should be pursued at every opportunity. By your showing initiative
and concern for the case at hand your client will quickly develop
respect for you and confidence in your ability. On the other hand, you
should take great pains not to be overbearing or present yourself as
already knowing what the client needs. By collaborating with the
client you will be able to develop an investigative plan that should be
agreed to by all members of the team.
Be prepared to listen, take notes, and make copies of relevant items
within the client’s possession, if the client will allow it. Be ready to dis-
cuss the information sources that may be available for you to pursue
without subpoena, including government sources such as building
departments, highway department, county clerks, board of health,
motor vehicles, police, and so on. You should be familiar with the
types of records that are available from the agencies within your juris-
diction. For example, depending on the size of your local government
you may be able to obtain records such as:
• traffic light sequencing reports
• occupational or business tax certificate filings

• food-handler certificates
• as-built plans
• assumed name or DBA filings
• asbestos abatement inspections or filings
188 Basic Private Investigation
• building codes, violations, and inspection records
• deeds and mortgages
• property tax and homestead exemption records
• build permits
• animal licenses
• electrician, plumber, contractor licensing
• hunting and fishing licenses
• workers’ compensation claims
• vehicle certificates of origin, title applications, titles, registration
re cords
• driver’s license history
• accident or incident reports from police and fire departments
This is far from a complete list of things that you can obtain, yet
each could provide valuable information in your search for negli-
gence. These records may be called different names in your location,
but their purposes are universal. Many of these records are available
simply by asking or searching for them; others may require you to sub-
mit a Freedom of Information form in compliance with the laws with-
in your jurisdiction.
THE ISSUE OF WHO
In every case there will be a minimum of two “whos”: who is the
plaintiff and who is(are) the tortfeasor(s) that they believe harmed
plain tiff. A tortfeasor is a wrongdoer, an individual who commits a
wrongful act that injures another and for which the law provides a
legal right to seek relief, or a defendant in a civil tort action.

As the investigator, you will be looking to gather as much informa-
tion regarding these parties as possible during this first meeting.
Although it may be easier to initially obtain your client’s information,
it is advisable to conduct a full and thorough background investigation
of all the whos you become aware of during the investigative process,
including your own client. It is your job as the investigator to ensure
that there are no surprises in store for your client. If the opposing par-
ties’ investigators unearth something that you should have found or
did find but did not tell anyone about that proves to be damaging to
Professional Private Investigators in the Civil Justice System 189
your client, you can be assured that you will not be retained by that
client in future cases. The investigator’s job is not to tell the client what
he or she thinks the client wants to hear; rather, it is to tell the client
what he or she needs to hear. Most attorneys enjoy hearing good news
eventually, but good attorneys want to hear bad news immediately.
The other whos may include the various types of witnesses, busi-
nesses, employers, employees, contractors, subcontractors, govern-
ment agencies, landlords, property owners, pet owners, vehicle own-
ers and operators, emergency workers, experts, and so on. You may
not learn of all the whos at one time, so you must be alert to recognize
them at your initial meeting and follow-up investigation progresses.
WITNESSES
A word about witnesses: There are several different types of wit-
nesses that investigators may become involved with in a civil case. A
custodian of records may be called upon as a witness, but it is highly
unlikely that a private investigator would be deeply involved with this
process.
Private investigators should be concerned primarily with witnesses
who may either be “fact” or “expert” witnesses, but these are rather
broad terms. A fact witness is a person with knowledge about what

happened in a particular case who testifies in the case about what hap-
pened or what the facts are. Fact witness testimony consists of the
recitation of facts and/or events as opposed to an expert witness,
whose testimony consists of the presentation of an opinion, a diagno-
sis, and so on.
A fact witness is someone who may provide information about the
events leading up to, during, or after the incident. These could include
people who may have notified the defendant or the defendant’s rep-
resentative that there was a dangerous condition before an accident
occurred (notice witness) or an eyewitness who actually observed the
incident take place.
However, police, firemen, emergency medical technicians, tow
truck drivers, and so on may also be witnesses who can provide facts
and observations. Other nonexpert witnesses may be neighbors, rela-
tives, coworkers, maintenance workers, and so on, who can provide
190 Basic Private Investigation
information and observations regarding things that happened before,
during, or after the incident. These types of witnesses may tell you
about a long-ignored roof leak that may have contributed to the ceil-
ing collapse that injured your client, or you may learn that a plaintiff
has been working even though he or she has alleged a disabling injury,
or you could find out that the broken ankle that the plaintiff claims
happened in the stairwell of your clients building may actually have
happened during a weekly basketball game.
An expert witness is a person who possesses some special technical
knowledge and who is accepted by the court to offer opinions about
the incident as it relates to his or her particular field. These types of
witnesses include medical personnel, engineers, scientists, CPAs, and
so on. As an investigator you may be asked to accompany your client’s
expert to accident scenes, attend or tape-record inspections conducted

by your client or the opposing party, and to conduct background
investigations of both your experts and the opposing experts.
WHO NOT TO INTERVIEW
Every state, as well as the federal government has a code of profes-
sional responsibility or rules of professional conduct that prevents
attorneys from communicating directly with an adverse party whom
they know to be represented by an attorney. This prohibition extends
to any agent of the attorney, including investigators.
The following is part the American Bar Association’s Model Rules of
Professional Conduct from which the individual state and federal rules
were developed:
DR 7-104 Communicating With One of Adverse Interest.
(A) During the course of his representation of a client a lawyer shall
not: (1) Communicate or cause another to communicate on the sub-
ject of the representation with party he knows to be represented by a
lawyer in that matter unless he has the prior consent of the lawyer
representing such other party or is authorized by law to do so.
For the private investigator, this means that you should not speak to
any adversarial party whom you know is represented by a lawyer in
the case that you are investigating without first obtaining that lawyer’s
Professional Private Investigators in the Civil Justice System 191
consent for you doing so. To do so is not a criminal act, but the poten-
tial damage to your client’s case could be devastating.
This concept may also apply to employees of an adversarial com-
pany but is usually reserved for employees with a managerial or own-
ership position or those who may have direct knowledge of the inci-
dent. In any event, before you interview any employee of an adver-
sarial company who is represented by counsel, you should first discuss
this matter with your own attorney-client. If you are uncertain as to
whether individuals are represented by counsel, you should ask them

about this during your introduction and prior to asking any further
questions about the case. If they indicate they have counsel, terminate
the interview until you are able to obtain their attorney’s consent to
proceed.
THE ISSUES OF WHAT, WHY, WHEN, AND HOW
Because this is a tort case, you will be asked to investigate the dam-
age that one party allegedly caused the other party. During your initial
meeting, your attorney-client should provide you with his or her legal
theory of the negligence involved, from which you will launch your
investigation. As the investigator, it is not enough for you to simply
learn the legal requirement or threshold of negligence; rather, it is far
more important for you to understand what, why, and how the dam-
age occurred from a practical, real-world point of view.
Negligence is the failure to exercise the care toward others that a
reasonable or prudent person would do in the circumstances or taking
action that such a reasonable person would not. Negligence is acci-
dental as distinguished from “intentional torts” (assault or trespass, for
example) or from crimes, but a crime can also constitute negligence,
such as reckless driving.
Simply stated, people become negligent when they fail to live up to
their obligations by not following reasonable practices and when their
actions or inactions cause harm to someone else. So, it is not really
actions or lack of actions that are negligent; rather, doing or not doing
something only becomes negligent when someone is harmed by it. A
tightrope walker can practice thirty feet in the air over a concrete side-
walk without a safety net every day and not be negligent, yet the one
192 Basic Private Investigation
time that he falls and injures a passerby below him he will likely be
negligent. Why? Because he had an obligation to ensure that no one is
injured by his actions. This does not mean that a pattern of reckless or

dangerous behavior is not important to demonstrate. Quite the con-
trary, your attorney-client will be very interested in developing any
pattern of bad or risky behavior on the part of the opposing party that
you can learn about and relay to the attorney.
Once again, investigators should be aware of differences in state
laws as they relate to negligence. “Vicarious liability” is a tort doctrine
that imposes responsibility on one person for the failure of another
with whom the person has a special relationship (such as parent and
child, employer and employee, or owner of vehicle and driver) to
exercise such care as a reasonably prudent person would use under
similar circumstances. For private investigators in many states, there
was little to do in vehicle accident cases in which the defendant was
driving a leased or rented vehicle. Vicarious liability in the state of
New York was absolute. If you were Hertz, or Ford Credit, you were
liable even if your renter or lessee was driving recklessly.
In 2003, as a result of continual vicarious liability litigations, many
vehicle manufacturing or leasing companies such as GM, Ford, and
Chrysler and nearly every major retail bank and credit union in New
York, stopped the practice of leasing vehicles. This changed when the
Federal Public Transportation Act of 2005 became law, ending the vic-
arious liability of automobile leasing companies or rental agencies,
which would no longer be held liable for the accidents of their renters
or lessees. An unexpected bonus for private investigators was the need
to determine liability in automobile accidents involving leased or rent-
ed vehicles in the affected states.
It is the attorney’s job to prove or disprove that a party to the law-
suit had the legal obligation to act or not act in one way or another and
that his or her failure to live up to that obligation caused the injury. It
is the private investigators job to provide his client with the real facts
of what happened.

You will generally not learn the full magnitude of what happened
during the initial meeting with the client, yet you should not leave the
meeting without obtaining as much information as possible.
You must also listen for the whys, whens, and hows. You may learn
that the injured party fell because there was a crack in the sidewalk, and
Professional Private Investigators in the Civil Justice System 193
you may learn of the theory that the crack was caused by nearby con-
struction of a subway station. You may learn that several other people
had previously reported that they had tripped at the same place. Not
only will you need to learn the time and date of the injury, but you may
also need to learn when a dangerous condition first appeared. How
something occurred will always be of relevance. Was there a mechani-
cal failure? Was one of the parties distracted? Was the weather a con-
tributing factor? Was it a lack of or improper maintenance? These are
all issues that will require further investigation and documentation.
INVESTIGATIVE PLANNING
Now that you have learned everything that your client could or
would tell you about the case, it is time to agree upon an investigative
plan. It is not necessary to reinvent the wheel for every case; rather it
is far better to have a general framework into which you can plug data
in each particular set of circumstances, keeping in mind that “thinking
outside of the box” is often useful. Using what you have learned from
the who, what, why, when, where, and how is a good starting point for
your plan. This is also the time for you to discuss your fees and pay-
ment arrangements if you have not already done so.
If this is the first time that you have worked with this particular
attorney or client you should make him and her aware of the types of
background investigations you are capable of conducting on all of the
parties, businesses, and witnesses (the whos). At a minimum, back-
ground investigations should include:

• verification of the person’s pedigree information
• present and prior residences
• employment history
• litigation history
• criminal history
• known relatives
• neighbors
• driver’s license history
• professional or specialty licenses
• vehicles owned
194 Basic Private Investigation
• accident reports
• property ownership/history
• business relationships and associates
Other areas of background investigation can include interviews of
neighbors, employers, employees, coworkers, shopkeepers; searching
for previous insurance claims; conducting surveillance; verifying edu-
cation, hobbies, areas of expertise, military service, and so on; and the
follow-up on any information that is discovered.
For backgrounds on all “expert witnesses” it will also be necessary
to verify their education and professional credentials and to uncover
any disciplinary actions or complaints against them. Your client may
ask you to identify previous cases in which the experts provided testi-
mony so that their testimony can be reviewed.
Background investigations can become quite costly, and they should
not be undertaken without preapproval from the client, who may
already be in possession of some of this information.
Your investigative plan should contain the names of all persons
known to be involved and your investigative obligation regarding
them, in other words conducts a background investigation, interview,

surveillance, and so on. Because most civil cases take years to reach a
final conclusion, you should clearly document your client’s instruc-
tions regarding anyone that he or she does not want you to speak with
or those who should be the subject of a background investigation.
Three or four years down the road, your client or another attorney
who is assigned to the case may ask you why you did not follow-up on
a particular person, and it is best to have these instructions memorial-
ized in your records.
This same practice should be followed with respect to other parts of
the investigation. For example, you may recommend obtaining certi-
fied copies of all building department violations issued for the premis-
es at which the trip and fall accident occurred or copies of all motor
vehicle accidents reported during the past three years at the same loca-
tion as your case. If your client does not think it necessary, you should
record his or her instructions in your investigative plan as well.
Aside from the people involved in the case, there are other things
that your investigative plan should contain if you are to be successful
in providing your client with a clear picture of the event.
Professional Private Investigators in the Civil Justice System 195
In the case of accidents, the plan should include a visit to the scene
so it can be photographed and/or videotaped and measurements
taken of the entire area. Accurate information is desired, but you may
not have the correct equipment or the expertise required to produce
exact measurements or to competently compare your findings to cer-
tain specifications. Your best effort to document the approximate dis-
tance is all that should be expected of you by the client.
If a more exacting measurement, reconstruction, or determination
of certain specifications is required, your client should retain the ser-
vices of an expert in that particular field. Investigators should only
portray themselves as accident reconstruction investigators if they pos-

sess the specific knowledge and training to be an expert in that area.
If you are investigating an automobile accident, your plan should
include the documentation of all traffic control and roadway markings
leading up to and at the accident site, as well as any roadway scars,
gouge marks, burns, and so on. Line of sight, visibility, time of day,
and weather are all important factors to be documented.
In nonautomobile accident or injury cases, you will need to docu-
ment issues concerning lighting, visibility, defects, grade, height of
steps, hand railings, maintenance schedules and logs, potential attrac-
tive nuisance issues, and so forth. The attractive nuisance doctrine is a
legal doctrine that makes a person negligent for leaving a piece of
equipment or other condition on property that would be both attrac-
tive and dangerous to curious children. These have included tractors,
unguarded swimming pools, open pits, and abandoned refrigerators.
Lia bility could be placed on the people owning or controlling the
premises even when the child was a trespasser who sneaked on the
property. The doctrine was intended to make people careful about
what dangerous conditions they left untended. Some jurisdictions have
abolished the attractive nuisance doctrine and replaced it with specif-
ic conditions (e.g. open pit and refrigerators) and would make proper-
ty owners liable only by applying rules of foreseeable danger, which
makes negligence harder to prove.
Your investigative plan will tell your clients what you intend to do
and give them the ability to add or subtract from it.
Your plan must take into account the amount of time that has passed
since the accident. If the incident was very recent, conditions at the
scene may be relatively unchanged. There may still be markings left
196 Basic Private Investigation
by law enforcement investigators that you can document or debris or
other evidence from the accident that has either been overlooked by

the initial investigators or swept aside, such as glass or other parts of a
vehicle.
On the other hand, you may be going to the scene days, months, or
years after the accident or injury. Things may have been considerably
altered, sometimes as a result of the accident itself. You may find that
a handrail has been installed in a stairwell; lighting has been added;
stop sign or traffic control devices now appear at the intersection
where none existed before; the road surface has been repaved, regrad-
ed, straightened; buildings have been constructed or demolished, and
so on.
Because the scene may have been altered or originally improperly
designed or constructed, it is important to obtain all official records,
applications, plans, and permits, for a predetermined period of time,
both before and after the incident. This should be noted in the inves-
tigative plan because it can become a time-consuming process.
Other types of official records include but are not limited to police,
fire department, building department, traffic department, design and
construction plans (as-built plans), traffic light sequencing, property
records, tax records, business records, maintenance schedules and
records, and so forth. Some items, such as prehospital care reports and
other medical records will require subpoenas, as will most business or
insurance records.
At times you may be able to obtain the records of nonpublic com-
panies and individuals simply by asking for them, but if they are not
produced voluntarily, a subpoena will be required. Your attorney-
client can also obtain certain records from opposing counsel during
the discovery process. Discovery is the entire effort of a party to a law-
suit and the attorneys involved to obtain information before trial
through demands for production of documents, depositions of parties
and potential witnesses, written interrogatories (questions and answers

written under oath), written requests for admissions of fact, examina-
tion of the scene, and the petitions and motions employed to enforce
discovery rights.
If you can think of records that the attorney should subpoena,
include them in you investigative plan as well. Once received, you will
be able to review those records and follow-up as necessary.

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